Taewon Jang Has a Talent for Accentuating Rich
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YORK VONLINTEL.COM VONLINTEL.COM YORK NEW 10011 STREET NEW YORK, NY 10011 TEL 1 212 242 0599 FAX 1 347 464 0011 [email protected] NY 10011 TEL 1 212 242 0599 FAX NEW YORK, RD NY FLOOR STREET RD LINTEL GALLERY LINTEL GALLERY LOCATION YORK, WEST 23 VON 520 NEW 520 WEST 23 Izima Kaoru, Sakai Maki wears Jil Sander (502), 2008, C-print, 70.9 x 59 inches GROUND NEW he past is a foreign country; they do things differently Tthere — Leslie Poles Hartley. Actually I never read the th eMmag.com novel this prescient quote is attributed to, The Go-Between (1953). But with the recent death of Harold Pinter, who wrote the screenplay for the 1971 film adaptation, I’ve EDITORIAL been sifting through fragments of language that resonate across time. Seems like a lot of people want to go back in time. Who would have thought we would be debat - 10 Butterfly Dream ing the merits of The New Deal nearly a hundred years at MOCA Shanghai By Guido Mologni after the The Great Depression. (Whose idea was it to call the Depression “Great” by the way?) 26 Taewon Jang at Gana Art New York As inconvenient truths go, unfortunately when all of By Mary Hrbacek the economic stimulus plans and protectionist plans of 30 La Biennale di Venezia the 1930s failed to turn around the most significant 53rd Venice Biennale 2009 worldwide economic depression to date, the worldwide By Viv Ying He war economy — yeah, that one, World War Two, rather conveniently “happened” in 1939 and all of a sudden everyone was back at work. Sure do hope that today’s economic stimulus plans and protectionist plans don’t fail; you never know what can happen. Just a thought. Then again, lots of people want to live in the future; they’re saving other peoples’ money for a rainy day or a nuclear winter, whichever comes first. What’s your pleasure; hot or cold? In any case, money is not money unless you spend it. Like blood, it has to circulate or it’s useless. The more you save, the more you lose. Where’s that “irrational exuberance” when we really need it? Yes, the world is changing; no, nothing’s changed at all. LISTINGS The past is a foreign country — How does that go 37 New York City again? 53 Chicago 55 Los Angeles ® 57 San Francisco in the art world 59 Miami the M magazine 59 Shanghai 59 Beijing Vol. 13, No. 1, September, 2009 ISSN 1534-5394 BASICS Executive Edit or / M. Brendon MacInnis • Promotions / Tam Vo •Art Director / Kristin Reger • Design / Sachi Honda /• 8 News Copy editor Intern / /Circulation s 61 Openings Claudia Eve Beauchesne Manager / Steven Rodriguez / • Contributing Writers / 64 Index Mary Hrbacek / Joel Simpson / Nicolette Ramirez / Natane T akeda / Joyce Korotkin / Guido Mologni /• Photo MAPS Editor / Joel Simpson • Architecture Editor / Guy Reziciner • Webmaster / 36 Village • LES Orin Buck 38 Soho • Tribeca Asia Bureau • Editor / Vivi Ying He 42 Chelsea MBM Publications, Room 104, building 2, 91 Tai An Rd Shanghai 46 Midtown • 57th Street 200052 China. Tel /CH 86.13761300987 /HK 852.95357978 48 Uptown email/ vivi@ the Mma g.c om 50 Brooklyn • Williamsburg the Mma g.c om 51 Queens • LIC Advertising / RHI Ltd. Tel /+86.21.6279.2815 52 Chicago ® the M magazin e is published monthl y by MBM Publications . 54 Los Angeles All requests for permission and reprints must be made in writing 56 San Francisco to MBM Publications 303 West 42nd Street, fifth floor 58 Miami • Wynwood New York, NY 10036. Tel 212.956.0614 A Stylish Gateway to the Lower East Side 60 Shanghai editor@ the Mma g.c om 62 Beijing Printed in China 151 East Houston Street, Lower East Side, NY tel 212-777-0012 www.hoteleasthouston.com www.theMmag.com 7 News New Member The Andre Zarre Gallery has joined the Member Listings Guide of M (see Chelsea Listings) . The National Academy Museum has joined the Member Listings Guide of M (see Uptown Listings ). H P Garcia Gallery has joined the Member Listings Guide of M (see Midtown Listings) . Elisabeth de Brabant Contemporary has joined the Member Listings Guide of M (see Shanghai Listings) . Nathan A. Bernstein & Co. Ltd has joined the Member GPS Listings Guide of M (see Uptown Listings) . gpsnyc.com Haward Golen gallery has joined the Member Listings Guide of M (see Miami Listings) . professional exhibition printing New Art Center has joined the Member Listings Guide of M (see Midtown Listings) .. & hi-res digital photo archieving On the Move Van de Weghe Fine Art has moved from Chelsea to Uptown ( see Uptown Listings ). 42 West 17th Street, New York, NY 10011 DFN Gallery has moved from Chelsea to Uptown, 212.242.7667 (see Uptown Listings). Art Fair Ping Yao International Photography Festival, also called PIP 2009 , takes place in China september 19 - 25, For more information, please visit: http://2009.pip - photo.com/english.aspx ShContemporary, also called THE Asia Pacific Contemporary Art Fair, takes place September 10-13, at the Shanghai Exhibition Center (see Shanghai art map on page 60). For more information, please visit: www.shcontemporary.info VIP Event In cooperation with the ShContemporary VIP Program , the M Magazine will hold a VIP release party Saturday, September 12 in Shanghai to introduce the bilingual Chinese/English edition of M called M Asia Review, which is edited by Shanghai based Vivi Ying He. To RSVP contact the VIP Relations of ShContemporary 2009. donna.chai@shcontempo - rary.info +86 21 322 203 81 %UXQFK /XQFK 'LQQHU RSHQ HYHU\ GD\ $0 30 8 www.theMmag.com 6XIIRON 6W 1HZ <RUN 1< 3KRQH ANDY LELEISI’UAO ͞ƐĞĨĞŬĂ ŽĨ ƚŚĞ hŶŵĂůŽƐĂ͟ EŽǀ ϭϬ Ͳ ĞĐ ϴ͕ ϮϬϬϵ Sponsored by www.bergmanandsons.com ϱϭϭ tĞƐƚ ϮϱƚŚ ^ƚ͘ EĞǁ zŽƌŬ͕ Ez ϭϬϬϬϭ .LSV *DOOHU\ ǁǁǁ͘ŬŝƉƐŐĂůůĞƌLJ͘ĐŽŵ ϭ ϮϭϮ ϮϰϮ ϰϮϭϱ “... all these uncertainties contribute to one certain motif – transformation – that matches vividly the intricate status-quo of contemporary Chinese art. ” Butterfly Dreams MOCA shanghai By Guido Mologni mong the significant art institutions to emerge Aduring last couple of years in Shanghai, MOCA (Museum of Contemporary Art) was founded three years ago in the picturesque People’s Park by the Samuel Kung Foundation as “the first non-profit, independently-operated con - temporary art institution in Shanghai”, with the endorsement of the Municipal Government. The past twenty or so exhibitions held at the museum have provided a platform for new contemporary Chinese artworks and have fostered a dialogue between artists at home and abroad. With art museums and art spaces flourishing in Shanghai, apparently undeterred by the economic melt down in the West, MOCA helps to cultivate Shanghai’s fledging art scene, nourishing a pub - lic appinite for contemporary art through a mix of thoughtfully curated exhibitions, lectures, films and art performances. MOCA Shanghai, restaurant lounge. 12 www.theMmag.com www.theMmag.com 13 From the exhibition Butterfly Dreams , MOCA Shanghai 14 www.theMmag.com www.theMmag.com 15 The idea for the most recent show, Butterfly Dream, curated by Victoria Lu, Pan Qing, Liu Chunfeng, and Diana Freundl came from the work of Zhuang Zi, a famous philosopher living during the Warring States Period. Zhuang Zi dreamt that he had be - come a butterfly. After waking up, he couldn’t tell if In he had dreamt of the butterfly or f it was the butter - fly that dreamt of him. An identity confusion arises, bringing great uncertainties between oneself and the outside world. In reverse, all these uncertainties contribute to one certain motif – transformation – that matches vividly the intricate status-quo of con - temporary Chinese art. During the past three decades, Chinese artists have devoted themselves to exploring new characteris - tics of this unprecedented era, redefining the tradi - tion. Meanwhile, mainstream western contemporary art ideologies flooded into China, playing an im - portant role amidst their Chinese counterparts. This exhibition collects artworks from artists living or working in China with a wide variety of genres. It suggests the rapid economic growth and sharp tran - sition of Chinese social structures. From the exhibition Butterfly Dreams , MOCA Shanghai 16 www.theMmag.com www.theMmag.com 17 this work we see a boy lying in the wooden box and gigantic skeleton in a huge monochromic background in the painting, Mam-Moth, by Li Jikai, together with objects such as aircraft, rab - bits and toy bricks, daydreaming and self-con - sciousness. Our attention falls on the boy’s meditation and a sense of distance in face of the outside world. Though the easier social con - ditions foster an egocentric attitude among young artists, Li Jikai doesn’t indulge himself in the release of nervous emotions when con - fronting reality. A deep introspection about self- existence give a sense of the freehand brushwork considered as the quintessence of tra - ditional painting. Addressing the decline of tra - ditional ink and wash painting, Wang pays homage to this Chinese tradition in a contem - porary way, extending its definition by pushing the limitations of technique. From the exhibition Butterfly Dreams , MOCA Shanghai 18 www.theMmag.com www.theMmag.com 19 From the exhibition Butterfly Dreams , MOCA Shanghai 20 www.theMmag.com www.theMmag.com 21 In a similar vein Li Chen’s sculpture Clear Soul ex - plores the spirit of Buddhism and Daoism. A cor - pulent, pudgy shape and casual gesture makes this image temporal, standing out from traditional Bud - dhist sculptures. The perfect rounded line frames the Buddha in an ethereal way. And the uppermost dark Buddha is more earthly than the one beneath covered with the silver patina.